Seth Eelen

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Red One Review: Amazon’s Misguided Holiday Adventure

Ho Ho Oh No! It’s a Jumanji Christmas with Amazon’s...

Heretic Review: Religion and Belief in Unsettling Cinema

Heretic is a psychological horror film starring Hugh Grant as Mr. Reed, who entraps two Mormon missionaries, Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton, in his eerie home. The film explores themes of faith and belief, delivering unsettling twists. While it falters in depth, Grant’s performance and cinematography maintain viewer intrigue throughout.

Review – Sequin in a Blue Room

Director Samuel Van Grinsven's first feature explores a 16-year-old's sexual encounters that turn awry, in coming-of-age turned into thriller Sequin in a Blue Room,...

Review – Apocalypse Now: Final Cut

I'm going to be honest here for a second and let you know, I've never watched the original version of Apocalypse Now. Watching Apocalypse...

Review – Apollo 11

Apollo 11 is a different kind of documentary. Composed entirely of archive footage, it doesn't beat around the bush and gets straight to the...

Interview – Samuel Van Grinsven – MIFF 2019

AFTRS graduate Samuel Van Grinsven emerges with a stylish and accomplished first-time feature with the erotic story of 16-year-old student Sequin (newcomer Conor Leach),...

Review – Crawl

Alexandre Aja is back! The French director best known for his gloriously gory remake of The Hills Have Eyes, is delivering another creature feature,...

Review – Booksmart

A coming of age comedy about girls/women, written by women, directed by a woman and starring two talented women. To the guys out there...

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Popular articles

Red One Review: Amazon’s Misguided Holiday Adventure

Ho Ho Oh No! It’s a Jumanji Christmas with Amazon’s...

Heretic Review: Religion and Belief in Unsettling Cinema

Heretic is a psychological horror film starring Hugh Grant as Mr. Reed, who entraps two Mormon missionaries, Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton, in his eerie home. The film explores themes of faith and belief, delivering unsettling twists. While it falters in depth, Grant’s performance and cinematography maintain viewer intrigue throughout.